Mental DietMental Diet

MENTAL DIET: How To Overcome Negative Emotions

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GETTING RID OF NEGATIVE EMOTIONS

PURPOSELESS LIVING:

When priorities and goals are not clarified, stress sets in which triggers negative emotions. Excitement is the custodian of those who knows where they are going and what they want to accomplish.

 When time is not dedicated to a purpose, time is wasted and when time is wasted, life is wasted. Consequently, when life is wasted stagnation and retrogression set in and the individual becomes buffeted with negative emotions caused by the stress and strain of life without a definite purpose.

Therefore, you must know where you are and where you are going. You must have a plan for your life and get busy working out the plan. Living on purpose and for a purpose set happiness in top gear.

INCOMPLETE TASK

When we thoroughly complete a given task or project our self-esteem goes up and our confidence level increases, consequently, we feel excited and contented with ourselves. However, when we abandon important tasks, goals, or projects leaving them partially done, our self-esteem nose dives and we encounter stress which results in negative emotions arousing within.

 Therefore, by leaving behind the habit of procrastination and developing the habit of discipline we should press on towards completing any given task, job, goal, or project we are committed to and we will feel good and satisfied with ourselves.

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ANGER

“Anyone can become angry that is easy. But to be angry with the right person, to the right degree, at the right time, for the right purpose, and in the right way is not easy.”

-ARISTOTLE.

In the dungeon of negative emotions anger is the boss. Anger is probably the most passionate of all the negative emotions. However, anger is not altogether negative rather it is how the individual handles the emotion of anger that makes it negative and even destructive.

Mismanaged anger is brutal to the body system. It can cause heart attacks, strokes, burst blood vessels, ulcers, migraine headaches, asthma, and skin diseases of all kinds.

Your response to any given situation is determined by your perception; it is the interpretation of the event to yourself. The same event can trigger different responses from different individuals.

Therefore, the emotional reaction of anger is a conditioned response that stems from the person you are rather than being determined by the situation. Anger is a learned response through repetition of our exposure to experiences in our environment.

 The habitual response of anger to any given situation is a product of a victim mentality that is rooted in pain and frustration. When anger rises up within, your blood pressure rises. And when anger becomes your habitual attitude response mode, your blood pressure stays up. When stress level builds up, anger level stirs up.

 Anger is a response choice in any given situation. Anger is a reactive response that acts as a defense mechanism based on your perception and interpretation of the event.

In my analysis there are:

  • Explosive anger

Explosive anger is a verbal or physical assault that causes emotional damage or physical damage to people or property.

  • Implosive anger

The implosive anger is the repressed rage that leads to a reprisal attack that raids destiny.

  • Rightly directed, wisely expressed anger.

Can you control your tongue when you are angry? The ability to control your tongue and invariably your actions when angry is what makes you a king. You may ask: what if the person deserves it? Well, I’ll reply to you with the story below:

Bob Hoover was a famous test pilot in his time in America. One day, he was returning home from an air show in San Diego. At three hundred feet in the air, both engines suddenly stopped. By deft maneuvering, he managed to land the airplane. Fortunately, nobody was hurt but the plane had been badly damaged.

When the plane landed Hoover immediately went ahead to inspect the airplane’s fuel. He guessed right, the World War II propeller plane he had been flying had been fuelled with jet fuel rather than gasoline. He made it straight to the airport to meet the mechanic who had made a grave mistake while servicing the airplane.

As Hoover approached the mechanic, tears ran down his face. He had caused the loss of a very expensive plane and moreover, he could have caused the loss of three lives as well.

 Hoover was infuriated but amazingly, he didn’t tongue-lash the mechanic, he didn’t criticize him. Rather, he did a remarkable thing that sure made a positive impact and impression in the mind of the mechanic. Hoover put his arm around the man’s shoulder and said, “To show you I’m sure you’ll never do this again. I want you to service my F-51 tomorrow.”

Hoover’s reaction to the situation paid off more than all the criticism and tongue lashing in the world. He had exercised self-discipline and had influenced his life positively. We should strive to control ourselves and speak from our heart rather than our head when we get angry at someone.

The story below is an example of explosive anger and how to deal effectively with it, straight out of life.

Dr. Ben Carson, a retired outstanding neurosurgeon, bestselling author, speaker, and a former Republican United States presidential aspirant shared a wonderful story about himself. Dr. Carson narrated that he was quick-tempered when he was quite young. On a certain day, he had an argument with his friend and somehow he threw a knife at his friend, which nearly penetrated into his friend’s body. Instantly, fear gripped him over his action and he ran into the bathroom and wept.

He prayed that God should take away such anger from him. He reached for His Bible and read some verses in the book of Proverbs that had to do with anger. He stayed in the bathroom for about an hour praying. He testified that after that day, he never experienced such temper in his life.

The crux of the whole matter is, had he continued with such a temper, it could have destroyed his personality and his climb to the top of his career. No one wants to be around someone who is quick-tempered. It breeds enemies and scares away friends. Hence, it repels success.

When patience is in place and mercy triumphs over judgment, anger is easily controlled. Repressed anger may lead to transferred aggression on members of your family or people who can’t defend themselves. Respond to an offense with forgiveness rather than with anger. Let go of resentment and you will have rest of mind.

Suppressed emotions lead to oppressed body systems that accumulate in pain and diseases. We need to deal with the root of anger; don’t stuff it in and don’t blow it out rather express it wisely. When we live in emotional denial we become emotionally drained and our lives become dredged. When you stuff damaging emotions into your inner self, you strangle the life-supporting system of your body.

When we don’t express our pain, our pain will poison our souls and expose us to devastation. Negative emotions concealed seal off the flow of life within us and death sets in emotional death, relationship death, financial death, and ultimately physical death.

Childhood traumatic experiences such as sexual, physical, and emotional abuse, humiliation, and rejection, are frequently stuffed in and leads to explosive anger when triggered by even seemingly minor events or situation.

 Don Colbert M.D reveals, “Those who have stuffed negative emotions, especially anger, and hostility for years, don’t need much to set them off. The least little insult-the driver on the freeway who cuts him off, the person at work who voices criticism her way, a person who ignores his presence-can produce an outburst that is above and beyond a normal response.”

DEALING WITH ANGER:

  • To deal effectively with anger don’t stuff it inside; deal with it forthrightly.
  • If you’ve hurt someone through your words and actions, apologize quickly. Repent of it.
  • In situations where you feel anger welling up within rather than bursting it forth, leave the scene; take a deep breath and count from 1-to 100 till when you are able to calm down, reflect on and analyze the situation objectively.
  • Ask God to help you with understanding and wisdom to give the right response or make the right choice.
  • Thank God for the anticipated help. As you will be divinely prompted, act accordingly and you will reap the fruit of your wise actions.

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4 Comments

  1. I was extremely pleased to discover this page. I want to to thank you for ones time due to this wonderful read!! I definitely appreciated every part of it and I have you bookmarked to look at new information on your web site.

  2. This is the right blog for everyone who wishes to understand this topic. You realize so much its almost tough to argue with you (not that I really would want toÖHaHa). You certainly put a brand new spin on a topic that has been discussed for years. Great stuff, just great!

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